many-storied buildings
Tall buildings, Chinese vocabulary.
Pinyin: G à ot á NGD à sh à
Interpretation: refers to the towering building. The same as "tall buildings".
idiom
many-storied buildings
Pinyin
gāotángdàshà
Citation explanation
A towering building. The same as "tall buildings". The fourth fold of Liu Xingshou written by Yang Xian in Yuan Dynasty: "master, it's quiet here. My disciples don't love high buildings." Qiu Chuji of the Yuan Dynasty: the land of Nancun is the best. The meandering water crosses the willow path horizontally and obliquely. It's a pond. Clap the lotus on the wall. many-storied buildings. Every household can be painted like a screen. High mountains and high hills. Day by day, the clouds are far away and auspicious. Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, Volume 3 of Xingshi Hengyan, oil peddler monopolizes Huakui: how can the little lady live in Xiaoke's house? Chapter 8 of he Dian: you can't help but make him a little grandmother. He lives in a high-rise building and can't enjoy all kinds of food and clothing. Liu Dabai's poem "thirsty to kill bitterness" reads: "look back at the landlords, tall buildings, sitting around waiting for rent collection!"
Discrimination of words
High rise building, high hall and broad building
many-storied buildings
be able to deal with all the problems - bā miàn shòu dí
pestilential rain and unhealthy mist - zhàng yǔ mán yān